The legal status of assisted death in Canada is in urgent need of clarification and reform. If this is to take place, however, the process must be informed by a careful, thorough, and thoughtful analysis of the issues. In Dying Justice, Jocelyn Downie provides an up-to-date and comprehensive review of significant developments in the current legal status of assisted death in Canada. She then recasts the framework for analysis in terms of the nature of the decision for assisted death. Refusals of treatment and requests for assisted suicide and euthanasia, the author believes, should be respected if they are made voluntarily by informed and mentally competent individuals.
No one has yet proposed a regime for Canada that is both less restrictive than the status quo with respect to assisted suicide and euthanasia and more restrictive with respect to the withholding and withdrawal of potentially life-sustaining treatment. On the basis of a thorough review of all of the major arguments made against permitting assisted suicide and euthanasia, Downie's regime permits some assisted suicide and euthanasia, but also sets out and insists upon a test that must be met before refusals of treatment would be respected.
By:
Jocelyn Downie Imprint: University of Toronto Press Country of Publication: Canada Dimensions:
Height: 236mm,
Width: 159mm,
Spine: 22mm
Weight: 480g ISBN:9780802037602 ISBN 10: 0802037607 Pages: 250 Publication Date:22 June 2004 Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format:Hardback Publisher's Status: Active
Jocelyn Downie is the director of the Health Law Institute at Dalhousie University.
Winner of Abbyann D. Lynch Medal in Bioethics 2005